Novels

Home of discussion, generally. If it doesn't go in any of the other forums, post it in here.
User avatar
Spazmo
Haha you're still not there yet
Haha you're still not there yet
Posts: 3590
Joined: Wed Jun 12, 2002 4:17 am
Location: Monkey Island
Contact:

Post by Spazmo »

Everyone should read Terry Pratchett, especially people who loathe fantasy.
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.

RPG Codex
User avatar
Jeff
Mamma's Gang member
Mamma's Gang member
Posts: 5442
Joined: Thu Apr 18, 2002 7:05 pm
Location: The Outernet

Post by Jeff »

They're not very Fallouty though innit
User avatar
Spazmo
Haha you're still not there yet
Haha you're still not there yet
Posts: 3590
Joined: Wed Jun 12, 2002 4:17 am
Location: Monkey Island
Contact:

Post by Spazmo »

Well, yeah, but shut up.

Anyways, to whomever said they couldn't get into Earth Abides: you're a knucklehead. It's a really great book and is certainly worth the effort. I read the first half of the book in the middle of the quiet night and was really freaked out by how alone I felt while reading it. I had to go and pat my dog to reassure myself everyone else wasn't dead.
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.

RPG Codex
User avatar
Slave_Master
Strider Elite
Strider Elite
Posts: 990
Joined: Sun Jun 02, 2002 7:28 am
Location: On the dark side of the moon

Post by Slave_Master »

I get the same feeling whenever I read that book about the bald little swell guy with the purple crayon, Spazmo.
User avatar
requiem_for_a_starfury
Hero of the Wastes
Hero of the Wastes
Posts: 1820
Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2002 11:13 am

Post by requiem_for_a_starfury »

WWII novel rather than PA but still worth reading 'Street Boys' by Lorenzo Carcaterra. Group of Italian boys and a American Soldier defend the City of Naples against the Nazis.
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
The Jizz Stain
Regular
Regular
Posts: 58
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2003 8:00 pm

Post by The Jizz Stain »

A real good series, but it isn't PA, is The Great War series and the sequel to that series, which i forgot the title of. Its about what would have happened in the early 1900's if the South would have won the civil war how WW 1 would have looked like.
God does not like this.
Doyle
Strider Elite
Strider Elite
Posts: 939
Joined: Sun Apr 21, 2002 6:41 am

Post by Doyle »

The Jizz Stain wrote:A real good series, but it isn't PA, is The Great War series and the sequel to that series, which i forgot the title of. Its about what would have happened in the early 1900's if the South would have won the civil war how WW 1 would have looked like.
Yeah, by Harry Turtledove. I think the sequel series is Blood and Iron maybe? I've only read the first series, but they were good books.
Literacy is overated.
The Jizz Stain
Regular
Regular
Posts: 58
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2003 8:00 pm

Post by The Jizz Stain »

Blood and Iron was the first book in the 2nd series. Then Turtledove wrote one that Apollo/Soldier 87 might like about the Nazi's winning WW 2. Its called The Enemy Among Us I think, I haven't really read much of it. Just the first few chapters
God does not like this.
Doyle
Strider Elite
Strider Elite
Posts: 939
Joined: Sun Apr 21, 2002 6:41 am

Post by Doyle »

Found it. American Empire is the name of the WWII series.
Literacy is overated.
Kashluk

Post by Kashluk »

requiem_for_a_starfury wrote:WWII novel rather than PA but still worth reading 'Street Boys' by Lorenzo Carcaterra. Group of Italian boys and a American Soldier defend the City of Naples against the Nazis.
Sounds pretty fucked up.

Like the movie "Captain Corelli's Mandoline".
User avatar
requiem_for_a_starfury
Hero of the Wastes
Hero of the Wastes
Posts: 1820
Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2002 11:13 am

Post by requiem_for_a_starfury »

Kashluk wrote:Sounds pretty fucked up.

Like the movie "Captain Corelli's Mandoline".
I haven't read or seen Captain Corelli's Mandoline so I can't say. Street Boys is written by Lorenzo Carcaterra who wrote Sleepers. He says in the Author's Note that it's a fictional account of a true story.
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Kashluk

Post by Kashluk »

I meant the historical aspect. CCM is based on a book by Louis de Bernières, where during the WW2 an Italian light infantry squad fights against Nazi invasion in Albany... Burn history books, burn.
User avatar
S4ur0n27
Mamma's Gang member
Mamma's Gang member
Posts: 15172
Joined: Sat Jun 01, 2002 10:14 am
Contact:

Post by S4ur0n27 »

Nicolas Cage is teh gay tho.

And, about good books, King Rat, by James Clavell.
Not PA at all, but awesome.

Scifi : Jack L. Chalkers' Quintara Marathon, firts book is The Demons At Rainbow Bridge, second is The Run To Chaos Keep, third is The Ninety Trillion Fausts.

It really is awesome, tho I haven't read the third one yet, I can't find it anywhere in Quebec.
User avatar
RoGuEHeX
SDF!
SDF!
Posts: 12
Joined: Fri Apr 18, 2003 11:43 pm
Location: At the bottom of a bottle of vodka

Post by RoGuEHeX »

Through darkest America is a really good post apocalyptic book. Set after WWIII, the world has evedently been nuked to oblivion. You get to view the life of a young boy who lives in this aftermath.

Its a bit different to Fallout in terms of mutants but its very realistic and shows us a sickinging view of a very possible future.

If you like Apocalyptic books then i would reccomend it.
Muhahaha, fear my allmight powers you puny little mortals..Arrrrr *dives to dodge the mass of chairs and sharp objects*
Kashluk

Post by Kashluk »

So no muties and everything you see is modern, not 50's pulp scifi?
User avatar
Franz Schubert
250 Posts til Somewhere
250 Posts til Somewhere
Posts: 2714
Joined: Sun May 25, 2003 9:59 am
Location: Vienna

Post by Franz Schubert »

Don't be so set on 50's pulp, because modern post-apoc can be just as intriguing... give it a chance huh?
User avatar
Insane-Lark
Righteous Subjugator
Righteous Subjugator
Posts: 606
Joined: Fri Apr 19, 2002 4:03 am
Contact:

Post by Insane-Lark »

http://www.scifan.com/themes/themes.asp?TH_themeid=9

Some good reads listed there & a few things I've never even heard of. I won't let the Invalid_Session stop me from posting.
"I think you could beat IPLAY up for lunch money and still come up short." -Interrupt
Kashluk

Post by Kashluk »

Franz_Schubert wrote:Don't be so set on 50's pulp, because modern post-apoc can be just as intriguing... give it a chance huh?
Uh, who said I wasn't going to?
To be honest, when I first got involved with Fallout, the "oldy"-look seemed strange and ackward. I was wishing if it could be modern instead of that 50's "bullshit".
User avatar
RoGuEHeX
SDF!
SDF!
Posts: 12
Joined: Fri Apr 18, 2003 11:43 pm
Location: At the bottom of a bottle of vodka

Post by RoGuEHeX »

Well i'm not sure if its modern but its certainly not the 50's pulp you get in Fallout.

Society has devolved to a sort of early nineteenth century rusticness; much of the flavor of the tale recalls Civil War or Western epics. There's a familiarity here that is very troubling when you step back and ponder the details. These are us as believable cannibals.

This is great story of a man gone right in a world gone horribly wrong. It is almost a post-Apocalypse version of "The Searchers", combined with a moving portrayal of secrets unsealed, of revelation. It is not for the squeamish. The view of a barbarism sprung from our own loins is not an easy read, on top of the plain nastiness of the story's events. This is a story of a terrible potential that comes from within the civilization we now so cherish.

If your not so sure on whetehr you will like the setting then i suggest gettng it froma libary and reading maybe the first 2 chapters. But in general, if you like post apoc genre then you will like this.
Muhahaha, fear my allmight powers you puny little mortals..Arrrrr *dives to dodge the mass of chairs and sharp objects*
User avatar
boywoos
Elite Wanderer
Elite Wanderer
Posts: 641
Joined: Wed May 15, 2002 4:05 am

Post by boywoos »

Anything by Irvine Welsh, I'm reading a book at the moment called 'The Tin Drum' thats pretty awesome too.
Post Reply